Courts Decide Legal Questions About Foreign-Affairs Powers, Not the President
Thomas A. Berry and Nathaniel Lawson
Did the Fentanyl Wave Hit Oregon Just as Voters Decriminalized Drugs?
Jeffrey A. Singer
Money-Supply Growth Has Stabilized as Stealth Liquidity Keeps Bubbles on Life Support
Money supply growth fell again in December, remaining deep in negative territory after turning negative in November 2022 for the first time in twenty-eight years. December's drop continues a steep downward trend from the unprecedented highs experienced during much of
Understanding the Trump Phenomenon: It’s Not What the Elites Think
Donald Trump has won the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary and is leading in the polls to become the Republican candidate for the presidency in the upcoming general election. His status as the most likely contender to challenge
Affirmative Action, Jewish Quotas, and Academic Central Planning
Race-based affirmative action began with President John Kennedy's 1961 creation of a Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity (EEOC). Following that, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Then in 1965 President Lyndon B. Johnson issued Executive Order 11246 that
Freight Rail Safety in the Year Since the East Palestine Derailment
David Kemp and Peter Van Doren
Bastiat versus MMT
One doesn’t need to search modern economic literature to take on the MMT crowd. Just read Bastiat. Original Article: Bastiat versus MMT
Rising Interest Rates and the “Great Reset” Bubble
While the “Great Reset” involves an unholy alliance between governments and big businesses, implementing its policies is impossible without central banks suppressing interest rates. Now that rates are rising, people are finding firsthand the real costs of the “Great Reset.” Original Article: Rising
Bye Bye Willie: The Political Rent-Seeker
Intellectual property laws provide another example of how government stifles innovation and competition. Original Article: Bye Bye Willie: The Political Rent-Seeker